Cape Breton Post

Colchicine may be effective symptom treatment

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MONTREAL — An extensive study launched by the Montreal Heart Institute last March has concluded the anti-inflammato­ry medication colchicine can reduce some of the complicati­ons associated with COVID-19.

In a news release issued Friday, the institute described its findings as a “major scientific discovery” that could help millions of COVID-19 patients around the world.

Colchicine, an oral tablet that’s inexpensiv­e and easy to make, is already known and used for other diseases.

The study looked at its effects on 4,159 COVID-19 patients.

Patients involved needed to be over the age of 40 and have at least one risk factor for possible complicati­ons.

The results showed the medication helped reduce hospitaliz­ations by a quarter, the need for mechanical ventilatio­n by half and deaths by 44 per cent.

Researcher­s involved believe colchicine could become the first oral medication to be used to treat non-hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients.

In a statement, Dr. JeanClaude Tardif, director of the MHI Research Center, said the medication could have a “significan­t impact on public health and potentiall­y prevent COVID-19 complicati­ons for millions of patients.”

The institute said prescribin­g colchicine to patients could also help lower the number of people hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 and “reduce healthcare costs here and around the world.”

Called “COLCORONA,” the clinical trial was conducted in Canada, the United States, Europe, South America and South Africa.

The institute had received a $3-million grant to fund the trial in May.

 ?? ALLEN MCINNIS • POSTMEDIA FILES ?? Paramedics fight with snow and cold as they load an elderly COVID-19 suspect case into an ambulance in Montreal, on Jan. 16, 2021.
ALLEN MCINNIS • POSTMEDIA FILES Paramedics fight with snow and cold as they load an elderly COVID-19 suspect case into an ambulance in Montreal, on Jan. 16, 2021.

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